Chidoka’s List of VC Funded Naija Companies to Watch in 2022
.... Nigeria is Top Destination for Venture Capital Funding in Africa ($1.37b of $4b)
In 2021, Nigerian start-ups raised $1.37 billion from foreign VC firms amounting to 35% of the $4bn raised by African start-ups.
2/ This amount is more than what Nigeria spent on external debt servicing in 2020 and more than the budget of the bottom five states in the country.
Nigeria was the top destination for VC funding, ahead of South Africa, Egypt, and Kenya.
3/ However, measured by GDP per capita (which is within the purview of the govt), Nigeria has not done as well. South Africa at $14,239 ranks 5th, while Egypt at $14,023 is 6th. Nigeria, punching below its weight class at $5,280, is ranked 17th
Yet, we led the investment race
4/Nigeria’s leadership of the investments race is interesting because most of the success is in that space I called “Naija.” It is that haloed space where youth creativity is unleashed and government meddlesomeness is absent.
5/ It is that space defined by merit and value, where there is no quota system, no federal character, and no rotation formula. “Naija” is the country we don’t have.
It is the place where we unlock our potential and spread it globally.
6/ The Naija space is now globally recognised as different from the Nigerian State. Investors are betting that the Naija space would overwhelm and eventually redefine Nigeria.
The only doubters are “Nigerians”, who have refused to see the ongoing revolution.
7/ The ranks of these “Nigerians” include the young and the old, educated and not, government and private sector operatives
Basically,“Naija” is a state of mind. It is the spirit of possibilities. It is the space for those who know that these little ripples will become a tsunami
8/ While the political class hold up the banner for “Nigeria,” the biggest disappointment is the business class led by the Banks
Nigerian Banks have eyes but can’t see. They have refused to invest or extend loans to entrepreneurs while maintaining the highest charges globally
9/ They charge between $0.05 to $0.10 to send money electronically, charge account maintenance & sundry fees
Banks earned N216 billion in E-banking revenue in 2020. If they apply some of that revenue via loans & equity funding to Nigerian businesses it will make a difference.
10/ We may require a regulatory push for something foreigners willingly embraced.
The founders & staff of the businesses that attracted $1.37b (more than budget of Akwa Ibom state, 2nd after Lagos) are young Nigerians who, against all pressures, have migrated to the Naija space
11/ They are banking that the current challenges bedevilling Nigeria are temporary and caused by a dying political order. They pray that a new leadership inspired by Naija will overcome these challenges when it takes centre stage.
The believers in Naija are right.
12/ They see what the foreign investors see. The latter are hard-nosed, unemotional, and always focused on seeking opportunities for optimal returns.
Like the Naija entrepreneurs, they see our issues but can look beyond it to the glorious dawn.
13/ The investors cannot resist our English speaking and youthful population, large market, entrepreneurial mindset, vibrant democracy, historical management of diversity, rare consensus-building capacity, and potential as the leading African nation.
14/ Unfortunately, we lack political and business leaders who have the same “Naija” mindset and are willing to work hard to unlock the potential.
The 2023 general elections provide Nigerian youths with an opportunity to break those chains and #UnlockNaija.
15/ You must demand and install quality leadership. Liberated from the yoke of the old guard, we will see more Naija companies attracting foreign and local investments.
These companies will prosper and create jobs. We will realise the prosperity that has always been our destiny
16/ The companies listed below are my picks among the technology companies that attracted foreign venture funding.
Over 200 companies received investments in 2021, but here are my top 15 picks of companies to watch in 2021.
17/ The companies listed are in the seed, series A and B rounds. I have also followed the big players like Flutterwave, Andela, TradeDepot, Kuda, and exits like Paystack.
Naija is an exciting country to live in. Here is my list of Naija companies to watch in 2022.
18/ Young people founded all these companies. Women found many of them. In Naija, you can spread your wings and fly as high as your capacity can propel you.
19/ 1. Fliqpay – $0.12M raised
Fliqpay is a cross-border payment infrastructure for financial institutions and global businesses.
Website: fliqpay.com
Industry: Fintech
Founder(s): Ayowole Ayodele
Stage: Seed
20/ 2. Remedial Health - $0.17M raised
Remedial Health improves access to medicines by providing pharmacies and insurers direct to retail medicines
Website: remedial.health
Industry: Healthtech
Founder(s): Samuel Okwuada
Stage: Seed
21/ 3. Bumpa - $0.20M raised
Mobile-based inventory management and online store builder designed for the African market
Website: getbumpa.com
Industry: Commerce
Founder(s): Kelvin Umechukwu, Adetunji Opayele
Stage: Seed
22/ 4. TalentQL - $0.42M raised
TalentQL is a talent outsourcing and incubator company.
Website: talentql.com
Industry: Education
Founder(s): Adewale Yusuf, Sultan Akintunde
Stage: Seed
23/ 5. Mecho - $0.50M raised
Mecho is an on-demand auto repair and maintenance platform for individuals and businesses.
Website: mechoautotech.com
Industry: Auto services
Founder(s): Oluwasegun Owoade, Ayoola Akinkunmi
Stage: Seed
24/ 6. Bitmama - $0.75M raised
Fiat on and off-ramp for crypto in Africa. Buy and sell Bitcoin, Ethereum, cUSD, Celo & others via its exchange and services. Female Founded.
Website: bitmama.io
Industry: Fintech
Founder(s): Ruth Iselema
Stage: Seed
7. Edenlife - $1.40M raised
Eden Life is a tech-enabled service that puts your home’s chores on autopilot.
Website: ouredenlife.com
Industry: Commerce
Founder(s): Nadayar Enegesi, Prosper Otemuyiwa, Silm Momoh
Stage: Seed
26/ 8. Shuttlers - $1.60M raised
Shuttlers is a platform that offers mobility solutions by providing scheduled bus-sharing
Female Founded.
Website: shuttlers.ng
Industry: Mobility
Founder(s): Damilola Olokesusi, Busola Majekodunmi, Damilola Quadry
Stage: Seed
27/ 9. Bankly - $2.10M raised
Bankly is a cash digitisation savings product that allows users to top up their wallets using vouchers. Female Founded.
Website: bankly.ng
Industry: Fintech
Founder(s): Tomilola Adejana, Fredrick Adams
Stage: Seed
10. Edukoya - $3.50M raised
Edukoya builds online education content and offers tutoring for students and their parents. Female Founded
Website: edukoya.com
Industry: Education
Founder(s): Honey Ogundeyi
Stage: Seed
29/ 11. Okra - $4.50M raised
Okra is the Open finance infrastructure that enables developers and businesses to build personalised digital products/services.
Website: okra.ng
Industry: Fintech
Founder(s): Fara Ashiru Jituboh, David Peterside
Stage: Seed
30/ 12. Appzone - $10.00M raised
AppZone is a fintech software provider building out the core infrastructure for digital financial services in Africa.
Website: appzonegroup.com
Industry: Fintech
Founder(s): Emeka Emetarom, Obi Emetarom, Wale Onawunmi
Stage: Series A
31/ 13. VertoFX - $12.20M raised
VertoFX powers cross‑border payments for the world’s fastest‑growing start-ups, specifically focusing on emerging markets
Website: vertofx.com
Industry: Fintech
Founder(s): Ola Oyetayo, Anthony Oduwole
Stage: Series A
32/ 14. Alerzo – $16.00M raised
Alerzo is a B2B e-commerce retail company providing a technology and services platform that transforms how informal retail stores operate.
Website: alerzo.com
33/ 15.Lidya - $16.50M raised
Lidya is a financial services platform to improve access to credit & finance across frontier and emerging markets starting with Nigeria
Website: lidya.info
Industry: Fintech
Founder(s): Ercin Eksin, Tunde Kehinde
Stage: Series B
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1/ The Evil Traits we Must Eschew: Nkali (Negative Superiority) Nkpali (Disrespect and Abusive behaviour) na Mmegbu (Oppression)
I have consistently preached the message of applying Uche (Intellect),Uchu (Hardwork) EgwuChukwu (Fear of God) as virtues that will unlock potentials
2/ To achieve this pivoting from the gridlock of Nigeria, we must eschew the triple evil rearing its head in our society
The first is Nkali, the superiority syndrome where we display our superiority over others through flaunting wealth and deepening income disparity.
3/ The second is Nkpali, the disrespect of others. We now collectively suffer a disrespectful and abusive disorder growing like a stage four cancerous tumour.
To disrespect and abuse elders and those we consider beneath us is now described as courage; we must excise it now.
1/ NO TO EXTENSION/REAPPOINTMENT OF TENURE OF SECRETARY TO Federal Character Commission
Last year I opposed the appointment of the Chairman of Federal Character Commission for violation of Federal Character Principle. I implored Senate not to clear the Chairman for that reason
2/ I believe the Senate has not kept to the spirit and letter of the federal character law which they enacted in the discharge of their statutory role. They have allowed the Executive led by President Buhari to damage the tie that bind us as a nation.
3/ This willful disobedience of our laws and national consensus would have disastrous consequences in the future.
During the Senate clearing hearings a strong argument and appeal was made in favour of clearing the Chairman who is from the North.
1. @nnamexi thats another topic for another day but in summary it is the problem of an incompetent, I'll equipped and nepotism riddled bureaucracy. Our civil servants are supposed to be the stewards of national plans but they have turned to distributors of our national patrimony.
2. We need to rebuild our public institutions by
A. Developing open and transparent recruitment process
B. Observe Federal character at recruitment with the best from each state and merit for promotion
C. Use jamb for promotion exams to improve credibility
D. Training.. Training
3/ E. Build civil service Academies for all grades to instil basic skill, doctrine & national philosphy
F. Discontinue the Administrative Cadre. Stop the movement across ministries (we can adopt short rotations) staff should start and end in one ministry for institutional memory
@eyooekpo your observation is germane. My point is: what is the value of a standard guage rail from Lagos to Niger Republic when we can re build the narrow gauge and use the funds better on our roads?
The lag to Kano rail will cost $11.1bn to carry how many containers/goods?
2. Our highest container throughput was 1.7m in 2012, 2020 was about 1.3m. Lets take an average of 1.5 per annum growing 10% yearly will it justify $11bn dollars? We are assuming all the cargo are going to Kano if we are realistic then only about 25% may need to go up north
3. To pay back $11bn (4.4 trillion at N400) in 30 years with NO INTEREST will require about 146bn naira annually and 401m daily from passenger and cargo. I may be totally wrong but I doubt we have the numbers and capacity for such revenues.
Today, the All Progressives Congress National Working Committee organized a strange meeting in a strange location, Federal Executive Council Chamber and took a strange decision not known to the APC constitution to wit: dissolution of NWC.
The Party also set up a strange body called a caretaker committee sworn in by a strange person, Attorney General of the federation who by APC constitution is not allowed to hold a Party position.
The APC constitution provides in Article 18(iv) "No officer in any organ of the Party shall hold executive position office in government concurrently."
Interestingly the word dissolution is not in the APC constitution so the action of dissolution is unlawful and illegal.
As Dr Fauci said we have a peculiar virus which spreads without physical contact with an infected person, it also spreads from asymptomatic persons, it spreads through surfaces & can survive for hours if not days in good environment
Good news is it can ‘die’ from soap and water
Now we don’t know enough about the virus to talk about local strategies. Does it reinfect those previously infected? Can we develop herd immunity? How do we manage symptoms at scale if the virus new cases keep rising?
Hence the challenge of Nigeria talking about local content
Local content is possible where local capacity exist, for malaria and HIV and indeed all infectious diseases we depend on donor funding for large scale survey.
So we have no local capacity to develop local strategy and models.